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I live in Phoenix, so I won’t let the cat out of the bag on this one. It’s standing amidst our state flowers, and that’s fieldmark enough. Brown crown, gray face, touch of yellow visible along the primary shafts.

This was harder for me than it first seemed. I’m thinking a female Gilded Flicker. The tan back with a lighter underside speckled with black means it’s not a Gila (which is what I wanted it to be on first glance). It has the sort of goldish crown marking, but not the male Gilded’s red mustache marking. The black cresent on the breast also seems important.

I also considered a Willaimson’s Sapsucker, but the Williamson’s doesn’t have the black crescent on the breast.

Finally, I think the Northern Flicker has a browner face and not as strong a crescent. But I’m unsure if a female would have the facial and head markings that seem really different.

Bardiac — a Northern Flicker would show gray on the rear portion of the crown, and any Northern that lacks a red patch on the rear of the head should show salmon-pink on the undersides of the wing and tail. This bird shows bright yellow. So — good call.

Nick, looks like you got caught by the field guides “species only” problem — the range maps for Northern Flicker don’t seem to distinguish the forms. Red-shafted is the expected race in Arizona, but they usually aren’t found low enough to be perched on a Saguaro. The zone of obvious intergrades between yellow and red-shafted birds runs just east of the Rockies, through eastern Colorado and down into New Mexico.

I’m a beginning birder but my guess is a female Gilded Flicker. It lacks the male’s red moustache, it appears to have yellowish undertail coverts rather than the reddish orange ones of the Northern Flicker and has the lighter flanks and belly of the Gilded Flicker. I don’t know if Northern Flickers are found in the S.W. desert along with the Gilded Flickers.